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1.
Int J STD AIDS ; 28(8): 788-799, 2017 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27590913

ABSTRACT

This study aimed to identify facility-level characteristics associated with prevention of mother-to-child HIV transmission service quality. This cross-sectional study sampled 60 health facilities in Mozambique, Côte d'Ivoire, and Kenya (20 per country). Performance score - the proportion of pregnant women tested for HIV in first antenatal care visit, multiplied by the proportion of HIV-positive pregnant women who received appropriate antiretroviral medications - was calculated for each facility using routine data from 2012 to 2013. Facility characteristics were ascertained during on-site visits, including workload. Associations between facility characteristics and performance were quantified using generalized linear models with robust standard errors, adjusting for country. Over six months, facilities saw 38,611 first antenatal care visits in total. On-site CD4 testing, Pima CD4 machine, air conditioning, and low or high (but not mid-level) patient volume were each associated with higher performance scores. Each additional first antenatal care visit per nurse per month was associated with a 4% (95% confidence interval: 1%-6%) decline in the odds that an HIV-positive pregnant woman would receive both HIV testing and antiretroviral medications. Physician workload was only modestly associated with performance. Investments in infrastructure and human resources - particularly nurses - may be critical to improve prevent mother-to-child HIV transmission service delivery and protect infants from HIV.


Subject(s)
Anti-HIV Agents/therapeutic use , HIV Infections/prevention & control , Health Facilities/standards , Infectious Disease Transmission, Vertical/prevention & control , Prenatal Care/standards , Quality Indicators, Health Care/standards , AIDS Serodiagnosis/standards , AIDS Serodiagnosis/statistics & numerical data , Antibiotic Prophylaxis/standards , Antibiotic Prophylaxis/statistics & numerical data , CD4 Lymphocyte Count/standards , CD4 Lymphocyte Count/statistics & numerical data , Cote d'Ivoire , Cross-Sectional Studies , Female , HIV Infections/drug therapy , Health Facilities/statistics & numerical data , Health Services Accessibility , Humans , Infant , Kenya , Mass Screening , Mothers , Mozambique , Quality Indicators, Health Care/statistics & numerical data
3.
J Acquir Immune Defic Syndr ; 72(3): e68-76, 2016 07 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27082507

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Efficacious interventions to prevent mother-to-child HIV transmission (PMTCT) have not translated well into effective programs. Previous studies of systems engineering applications to PMTCT lacked comparison groups or randomization. METHODS: Thirty-six health facilities in Côte d'Ivoire, Kenya, and Mozambique were randomized to usual care or a systems engineering intervention, stratified by country and volume. The intervention guided facility staff to iteratively identify and then rectify barriers to PMTCT implementation. Registry data quantified coverage of HIV testing during first antenatal care visit, antiretrovirals (ARVs) for HIV-positive pregnant women, and screening HIV-exposed infants (HEI) for HIV by 6-8 weeks. We compared the change between baseline (January 2013-January 2014) and postintervention (January 2015-March 2015) periods using t-tests. All analyses were intent-to-treat. RESULTS: ARV coverage increased 3-fold [+13.3% points (95% CI: 0.5 to 26.0) in intervention vs. +4.1 (-12.6 to 20.7) in control facilities] and HEI screening increased 17-fold [+11.6 (-2.6 to 25.7) in intervention vs. +0.7 (-12.9 to 14.4) in control facilities]. In prespecified subgroup analyses, ARV coverage increased significantly in Kenya [+20.9 (-3.1 to 44.9) in intervention vs. -21.2 (-52.7 to 10.4) in controls; P = 0.02]. HEI screening increased significantly in Mozambique [+23.1 (10.3 to 35.8) in intervention vs. +3.7 (-13.1 to 20.6) in controls; P = 0.04]. HIV testing did not differ significantly between arms. CONCLUSIONS: In this first randomized trial of systems engineering to improve PMTCT, we saw substantially larger improvements in ARV coverage and HEI screening in intervention facilities compared with controls, which were significant in prespecified subgroups. Systems engineering could strengthen PMTCT service delivery and protect infants from HIV.


Subject(s)
Anti-HIV Agents/therapeutic use , HIV Infections/prevention & control , Infectious Disease Transmission, Vertical/prevention & control , Mass Screening/organization & administration , Prenatal Care/organization & administration , Adult , Cluster Analysis , Cote d'Ivoire/epidemiology , Female , HIV Infections/transmission , Humans , Infant , Infant, Newborn , Kenya/epidemiology , Longitudinal Studies , Male , Mozambique/epidemiology , Operations Research , Pregnancy , Program Development , Program Evaluation
4.
Health Res Policy Syst ; 14: 1, 2016 Jan 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26742486

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Striving to foster collaboration among countries suffering from maternal and child health (MCH) inequities, the MASCOT project mapped and analyzed the use of research in strategies tackling them in 11 low- and middle-income countries. This article aims to present the way in which research influenced MCH policies and programs in six of these countries - three in Africa and three in Latin America. METHODS: Qualitative research using a thematic synthesis narrative process was used to identify and describe who is producing what kind of research, how research is funded, how inequities are approached by research and policies, the countries' research capacities, and the type of evidence base that MCH policies and programs use. Four tools were designed for these purposes: an online survey for researchers, a semi-structured interview with decision makers, and two content analysis guides: one for policy and programs documents and one for scientific articles. RESULTS: Three modalities of research utilization were observed in the strategies tackling MCH inequities in the six included countries - instrumental, conceptual and symbolic. Instrumental utilization directly relates the formulation and contents of the strategies with research results, and is the least used within the analyzed policies and programs. Even though research is considered as an important input to support decision making and most of the analyzed countries count five or six relevant MCH research initiatives, in most cases, the actual impact of research is not clearly identifiable. CONCLUSIONS: While MCH research is increasing in low- and middle-income countries, the impact of its outcomes on policy formulation is low. We did not identify a direct relationship between the nature of the financial support organizations and the kind of evidence utilization within the policy process. There is still a visible gap between researchers and policymakers regarding their different intentions to link evidence and decision making processes.


Subject(s)
Child Health , Developing Countries , Health Policy , Health Status Disparities , Maternal Health , Research/organization & administration , Africa , Humans , Information Dissemination , Latin America , Maternal-Child Health Services/organization & administration , Qualitative Research
5.
BMC Res Notes ; 7: 743, 2014 Oct 21.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25335783

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: The objective of the prevention of Mother-to-Child Transmission (pMTCT) cascade analysis tool is to provide frontline health managers at the facility level with the means to rapidly, independently and quantitatively track patient flows through the pMTCT cascade, and readily identify priority areas for clinic-level improvement interventions. Over a period of six months, five experienced maternal-child health managers and researchers iteratively adapted and tested this systems analysis tool for pMTCT services. They prioritized components of the pMTCT cascade for inclusion, disseminated multiple versions to 27 health managers and piloted it in five facilities. Process mapping techniques were used to chart PMTCT cascade steps in these five facilities, to document antenatal care attendance, HIV testing and counseling, provision of prophylactic anti-retrovirals, safe delivery, safe infant feeding, infant follow-up including HIV testing, and family planning, in order to obtain site-specific knowledge of service delivery. RESULTS: Seven pMTCT cascade steps were included in the Excel-based final tool. Prevalence calculations were incorporated as sub-headings under relevant steps. Cells not requiring data inputs were locked, wording was simplified and stepwise drop-offs and maximization functions were included at key steps along the cascade. While the drop off function allows health workers to rapidly assess how many patients were lost at each step, the maximization function details the additional people served if only one step improves to 100% capacity while others stay constant. CONCLUSIONS: Our experience suggests that adaptation of a cascade analysis tool for facility-level pMTCT services is feasible and appropriate as a starting point for discussions of where to implement improvement strategies. The resulting tool facilitates the engagement of frontline health workers and managers who fill out, interpret, apply the tool, and then follow up with quality improvement activities. Research on adoption, interpretation, and sustainability of this pMTCT cascade analysis tool by frontline health managers is needed. TRIAL REGISTRATION: ClinicalTrials.gov NCT02023658, December 9, 2013.


Subject(s)
Delivery of Health Care/methods , HIV Infections/prevention & control , Health Facilities/standards , Health Personnel , Infectious Disease Transmission, Vertical/prevention & control , Mothers , Pregnancy Complications, Infectious/prevention & control , Child , Delivery of Health Care/standards , Female , Geography , Humans , Mozambique , Postnatal Care , Pregnancy
6.
J Int AIDS Soc ; 17: 18828, 2014.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24666594

ABSTRACT

INTRODUCTION: Efforts to implement and take to scale highly efficacious, low-cost interventions to prevent mother-to-child HIV transmission (pMTCT) have been a cornerstone of reproductive health services in sub-Saharan Africa for over a decade. Yet efforts to increase access and utilization of these services remain far from optimal. This study developed and applied an approach to systematically classify pMTCT performance to identify modifiable health system factors associated with pMTCT performance which may be replicated in other pMTCT systems. METHODS: Facility-level performance measures were collected at 30 sites over a 12-month period and reviewed for consistency. Five combinations of three indicators (1. HIV testing; 2. CD4 testing; 3. antiretroviral prophylaxis and combined antiretroviral therapy initiation) were compared including a composite of all three, a combination of 1. and 3., and each individually. Approaches were visually assessed to describe facility performance, focusing on rank order consistency across high, medium and low categories. Modifiable and non-modifiable factors were ascertained at each site and ranking process was reviewed to estimate association with facility performance through unadjusted Chi-square tests and logistic regression. After describing factors associated with high versus low performing pMTCT clinics, the effect of inclusion of the 10 middle performers was assessed. RESULTS: The indicator most consistently associated with the reference composite indicator (HIV testing, antiretroviral prophylaxis and combined antiretroviral therapy) was the single measure of antiretroviral prophylaxis and combined antiretroviral therapy. Lower performing pMTCT clinics ranked consistently low across measurement strategies; high and middle performing clinics demonstrated more variability. Association between clinic characteristics and high pMTCT performance varied markedly across ranking strategies. Using the reference composite indicator, larger catchment area, higher number of institutional deliveries, onsite CD4 point-of-care capacity, and higher numbers of nurses and doctors were associated with high clinic performance while clinic location, NGO support, women's support group, community linkages patient-tracking systems and stock-outs were not associated with high performance. CONCLUSIONS: Classifying high and low performance provided consistent results across ranking measures, though granularity was improved by aggregating middle performers with either high or low performers. Human resources, catchment size and utilization were positively associated with effective pMTCT service delivery.


Subject(s)
HIV Infections/prevention & control , Health Services/statistics & numerical data , Infectious Disease Transmission, Vertical/prevention & control , AIDS Serodiagnosis/standards , AIDS Serodiagnosis/statistics & numerical data , Anti-HIV Agents/therapeutic use , Antibiotic Prophylaxis/standards , Antibiotic Prophylaxis/statistics & numerical data , CD4 Lymphocyte Count/standards , CD4 Lymphocyte Count/statistics & numerical data , Female , Health Services/standards , Humans , Mozambique/epidemiology , Pregnancy , Program Evaluation , Quality Indicators, Health Care/standards , Quality Indicators, Health Care/statistics & numerical data
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